E.C. Laloosh wrote:Mora wants to be at UW. When Sark moves on, Mora will be heading North.

Maybe once upon a time that was true. But I cant see him building up UCLA stronger then they've been in decades and then leaving for another pac 12 job, even if it is his alma mater. Sounds like UW wishful thinking to me. Sort of like the Duck fans who think all we have to do is snap our fingers and Chris Pederson will come running over from Boise State to take over, or that when Aliotti retires Wilcox will automatically come to replace him as DC.

Mora has a lot of Carroll in him. Very vibrant. He exudes energy and charisma. The fact that he's been able to stand toe to toe and win against the likes of Lane Kiffin for the top recruits is understandable. If he can put it together in the next year or two, I can see him having a Carrollesque run in the next decade. SC is going to have to fish or cut bait because Kiffin simply cannot compete with Mora at virtually any level. The real impact of the sanctions are going to be felt in 2013/14 as the lack of depth is going to be most pronounced right now. And if UCLA gets to a point where they have a class that never lost to SC, they could be headed to a dark down period like the 80s/90s. Mora already can lock up just about any recruit that SC wants right now.

Nice article. Thanks. I must not have understood that article I read. It wasn't real clear looking back at it. Maybe it meant 14th in the 2008 Olympic medal count? Still not sure lol. The article you posted is more clear.

If USC were a country entering its athletes in the Olympic Games, its 287 all-time Summer Olympics medals would place it 16th among all participating countries

Nice article. Thanks. I must not have understood that article I read. It wasn't real clear looking back at it. Maybe it meant 14th in the 2008 Olympic medal count? Still not sure lol. The article you posted is more clear.

If USC were a country entering its athletes in the Olympic Games, its 287 all-time Summer Olympics medals would place it 16th among all participating countries

Also, that 2nd link didn't work for me, error message.

Hmm. It works fine for me. Here's the relevant info:

Including the 2012 London Olympics, USC has produced more Olympians (422), medals (286), and gold medals (135) than any other university in the nation. For their part, UCLA is second in all three categories with 420 Olympians, 250 medals, and 125 gold medals. Their 536 combined Summer Olympic medals would rank 7th on the country list and account for more than one-fifth of all US medals, while their 260 combined gold medals would rank 3rd behind only USA and USSR.

While it's true that Mora has recruited well on paper, UCLA has been one of the Pac-10/Pac-12's best recruiting teams for years and years and it never translated. Last year UCLA posted a good record, but they folded like a chair when facing challenging competition. Plus, Jim Mora was a mostly terrible coach in the NFL, and I'm not going to forget that because UCLA over-achieved for one season. We'll see where they are at in a couple years but right now they lack the physicality of Stanford and the pure speed of Oregon. I think they are pretty much on par with teams like USC and Texas that haven't turned elite recruiting classes into elite football teams in recent times. That might change, but I'm still waiting to see a truly dominating team before I crown them.

Oregon was one of the best teams in the country last year, and they have most of their core group returning. If Oregon has more than 2 losses this year, I'm putting that squarely on the new coaching staff. Oregon's group of players are good enough to make the national championship game. But a new coaching staff means big time uncertainty. Chip Kelly may not have been the best college coach (Saban), but I'd argue that he was clearly the brightest one. That's hard to replace, and if there are philosophical differences with the new regime that could hold the ducks back as they were tailor fitted to Kelly's blueprint.

I'm still not sure about Shaw, but I under-estimated him last year. Harbaugh left a heck of a legacy behind, but Shaw managed it better in year two than year one. It was a small sample size, but I'm a fan of Kevin Hogan, so far I think he looks like a cross between Andrew Luck and Kirk Cousins. Their O-line and front seven are amazing. They play like bullies. Extremely physical. I don't think Stanford is better than Oregon, but Stanford is clearly the "toughest" team in the conference and maybe the most physical team in college football. They exposed Mariota as I thought they would in pretty much the same manner that Seattle exposed Kaepernick. Kaepernick still went on to nearly win a SB, though. Just the same, if Mariota can get by Stanford I think Oregon could potentially get to the national championship game.

I'm officially ambivalent on Sark. It's not that he's a bad coach but he strikes me as more suited to the NFL than the college game. He's a clever X's and O's guy, hires outstanding assistant coaches and is very smart, but he lacks recruiting panache and struggles with roster construction and you see the same glaring roster problems year after year (O-line in particular). He'd fit in well in the NFL especially if paired with a good GM. But in college, I think he's middle of the pack.

Rich-Rod really impressed me last season. It will be very hard to replace what Matt Scott gave them, but his system is known to get results from unheralded QBs. If we knew more about Arizona's QB situation I'd be tempted to pick them for the Pac-12 South.

Last edited by kearly on Fri Jun 07, 2013 1:47 pm, edited 2 times in total.

I think Arizona State and Arizona could both be pretty good, depending on their QB situations. I'm also really interested in watching Cal. I like their new coach, and they've had a horrible QB situation the last few years so they pretty much have to have some improvement there.

As of today, not knowing all the newcomers and everything, id put my pac 12 power rankings like this:

Oregon, Stanford

UCLA (I think they're still a year or two away, but wouldn't be shocked to see them at Stanford/Oregons level)Oregon StateArizona State, Arizona, USC, Washington (these 4 could really go in any order)

Cal, Utah (Cal could jump higher)

Washington State

Colorado (will most likely go winless in the pac 12 and is one of the worst bcs conference teams in the country)

Just as an aside to kearly talking about Sark. He comes across to me as a great coordinator who's not necessarily head coach material. I'm not sure he has the big time Alpha Dog personality that it requires to be a big time college coach. I'm kind of worried that Helfrich might be the same way, but we'll see.

JSeahawks wrote:Just as an aside to kearly talking about Sark. He comes across to me as a great coordinator who's not necessarily head coach material. I'm not sure he has the big time Alpha Dog personality that it requires to be a big time college coach. I'm kind of worried that Helfrich might be the same way, but we'll see.

I do think he's head coach material. I think he has a lot more charisma and camera presence than your stereotypical career coordinator type. I'd also consider this: think about how amazing Pete Carroll's track record is at identifying assistant coaching talent. He not only hand-picked Sark as his OC, but was also grooming him to take over at USC, that was until Sark bolted for UW. So if Pete thought that much of him, I think that says quite a bit just on it's own.

I do agree though about the lack of alpha dog in Sark, that gene that Jim Harbaugh has in abundance. Not that Sark sorely lacks in that area, but I think he might be a better coach if he had more of an edge to him. When things don't go UW's way, he doesn't get pissed, he shrugs his shoulders (same thing with Pete, though Pete exudes more self-confidence while doing it. Sark might as well say "aw shucks"). I think in any other profession, I'd consider that a good thing. I think as a coach though, you need to always have at least a little spark of intensity (or have resolute body language ala Tony Dungy, Lovie Smith, etc.). Sark has neither, and I think it's a valid detraction.

kearly wrote:I do think he's head coach material. I think he has a lot more charisma and camera presence than your stereotypical career coordinator type. I'd also consider this: think about how amazing Pete Carroll's track record is at identifying assistant coaching talent. He not only hand-picked Sark as his OC, but was also grooming him to take over at USC, that was until Sark bolted for UW. So if Pete thought that much of him, I think that says quite a bit just on it's own.

I'm not sure if I agree with the Pete Carroll angle. I love Pete. He's a great coach and I'm not sure there's any coach in the NFL i'd trade him for. He does put together amazing staffs, but there's no evidence that he produces great head coaches.

So far his tree is Kiffin, Sark and now Gus Bradley. I think Sark is probably the most promising of that bunch but overall its a pretty underwhelming group, imo.

Sark is totally an alpha dog. Did you ever watch him play? I went to school with him and sat down at the sidelines. The guy is VERY vocal and he knows what he's talking about. He knew it when he was 20, and he certainly knows it now.

Part of what you're seeing is that Washington has really struck out on some coaches. Slick Rick was a showman and proven phony. Willingham was ordered to clean up the program, and that's precisely what he did, and got fired for it. I get it... but you can't have it both ways. So he did his job, but he was low-key to a fault and entirely focused on the academics side and getting kids to graduate and clean things.

Sarkisian is trying to strike the balance of being able to get a crowd behind him, run a clean program, win (most of all this one), and build long-term sustained success.

You have to look at who his major influences were and how they operated. 1- Lavell Edwards. One of the all time greats. He brought the short passing game to the college ranks and used TE's and FB's as primary receivers and dominated some very big schools with very inferior talent. But he was the most mellow and stoic guy ever. I've seen him rip into players before, but he always did it out of sight, because they had an agreement. We all maintain dignity. Players loved Lavell for that, and they showed it with their play. Steve is doing the same thing. 2- Norm Chow. A madman. Literally. Norm is the one who brought Sark into coaching after his CFL career dried up and he went into the telecom industry. Chow convinced him to go into coaching, so Sark dropped everything and went and coached at UNLV, USC, and then UW. He wasn't going to be a coach, and he got into the game late. Chow is really weird in how he deals with players. He is a brilliant guy and has a doctorate in psychology I believe, and likes to play mental games. It works at times. It worked well in 1996 when BYU went 14-1 (one loss was to UW) and finished the season in the top 5 (and should have played in the NC game!!!!). Sark was the QB on that team.

He saw great success with low key coaches at the helm on the teams he played on. Now... could he go out and coach like Pete? Sure. But, he's not going to be in the position to until he establishes something I think. I think he'll get more and more like that as he builds. This is kind of the win or it's not going to happen year. I think he knows that. But he knows that to build a program you have to do a ton of work to take it from scratch and do so. That's essentially what he's done. That's precisely was Edwards did at BYU. That's what Pete did at USC (but he had a lot of good talent and a good rep having come from the NFL and USC has enormous history).

I think Sark is walking the line between the two types of coaches that he's worked with the most and finding his way. He is a good coach. He has no problem getting in anybody's face. But he also seems to know that he can't be Steve Spurrier as a coach, even though he was kind of like that as a player. Kids are too sensitive and leave if you do that kind of stuff now. The Bobby Knight school of coaching is closed.

It's true that Sark was a fiery/passionate QB, but I think he's been pretty different from that as a coach, at least in terms of tone and body language.

It's funny that you mention Steve Spurrier, because that's exactly the comparison I would make personality wise. Both are low-key personalities that rarely crack smiles but also rarely show negative emotion. Spurrier exudes the same outward projection whether his team just went 11-1 or 7-6. Sark's a similar animal.

Of course, Spurrier is far better at recruiting and runs a college style offense, so he'll always be a better college coach (I think Spurrier is among of the best in the college ranks).

Back to the alpha dog thing. Being an alpha dog doesn't mean being Bobby Knight or Jim Mora. It doesn't mean being a hardass. It simply means that the coach will leave no stone unturned to win (even if it means taking "ruthless" measures) and exudes a hyper-competitive personality. Jim Harbaugh is the ultimate example, and he's practically a players coach. Pete Carroll has a few alpha dog type traits if you look close enough, and there isn't a bigger player's coach anywhere. I just don't get the sense from Sark that he has that "edge" personality wise that drives guys like Harbaugh and Pete. Neither does Spurrier (IMO), but Spurrier is still a great coach. So this isn't a dealbreaker or anything, but do I think it's something that holds Sark back just a little? I do.

Last edited by kearly on Fri Jun 14, 2013 1:54 pm, edited 3 times in total.

JSeahawks wrote:I'm not sure if I agree with the Pete Carroll angle. I love Pete. He's a great coach and I'm not sure there's any coach in the NFL i'd trade him for. He does put together amazing staffs, but there's no evidence that he produces great head coaches.

So far his tree is Kiffin, Sark and now Gus Bradley. I think Sark is probably the most promising of that bunch but overall its a pretty underwhelming group, imo.

I didn't say he produced great head coaches. I said he knows coaching talent. Tom Cable, Dan Quinn, Jeremy Bates, Kippy Brown, Kris Richard(!), and Ken Norton jr. are all terrific assistant coaches. I even like Darrell Bevell, even though he's basically Greg Knapp 2.0.

I guess you could argue that he hasn't produced great head coaches yet, and fair point, but it's still pretty early for that. Even though he was at USC for a long time, it's somewhat uncommon for college level assistant coaches to get noteworthy head coaching jobs. He's only been in the NFL for 3 years, and he's already gotten one of his assistants a head coaching job.

Also, Kiffin was most likely a case of quasi-nepotism (Carroll considers himself a disciple of Lane Kiffin's father).

JSeahawks wrote:I'm not sure if I agree with the Pete Carroll angle. I love Pete. He's a great coach and I'm not sure there's any coach in the NFL i'd trade him for. He does put together amazing staffs, but there's no evidence that he produces great head coaches.

So far his tree is Kiffin, Sark and now Gus Bradley. I think Sark is probably the most promising of that bunch but overall its a pretty underwhelming group, imo.

I didn't say he produced great head coaches. I said he knows coaching talent. Tom Cable, Dan Quinn, Jeremy Bates, Kippy Brown, Kris Richard(!), and Ken Norton jr. are all terrific assistant coaches. I even like Darrell Bevell, even though he's basically Greg Knapp 2.0.

I guess you could argue that he hasn't produced great head coaches yet, and fair point, but it's still pretty early for that. Even though he was at USC for a long time, it's somewhat uncommon for college level assistant coaches to get noteworthy head coaching jobs. He's only been in the NFL for 3 years, and he's already gotten one of his assistants a head coaching job.

Also, Kiffin was most likely a case of quasi-nepotism (Carroll considers himself a disciple of Lane Kiffin's father).

That's a pretty good list. Wilcox is a terrific coach for UW. Not that I want Sark fired, but if they gave Wilcox Sark's HC job, I probably wouldn't complain in all honesty. I think he brings more to the current UW team than anybody.

My picks,Ultra conservative stock: Alabama or Oregon. Both schools have consistently preformed well, but if they are stocks I would be buying when their stock is at its highest.

Stocks trending up: UCLA and Ohio St. are two schools whose stock had been underachieving but whose stock went up last year and should continue to rise.

Penny stock: Mississippi St, this is a high risk high reward investment. Mississippi St is on a two year probation but they have a hand-full of NFL talent on the defensive side of the ball that have the size and speed that the Seahawks like in their defensive players. They started off red hot last year, but ended the season with a thud. A few of the players to watch are,(MLB) Benardrick McKinney: He is a long LB in the mold of KJ Wright. McKinney is 6-5 235 lbs, he is only a sophomore and won't be eligible until the 2015 draft. He has the potential to be a 1st round pick when he enters the draft. Here is a quick article on him. http://www.forwhomthecowbelltolls.com/f ... l-sec-team(DE) Preston Smith: Smith at 6-6 245 lbs is a junior that may be a player that comes out of nowhere to catch some NFL draft momentum during this season. (DE) Denico Autry: Autry is another long DE at 6-5 255 lbs. He is projected to be the best of Mississippi's St defensive ends this year.(DT) Nick James: James is only a sophomore and may not be a starter this year, but at 6-5 345 lbs he has the size that is intriguing.

sc85sis wrote:Next year is the last year of scholarship sanctions for USC.

And?

That's a very big deal. Especially how USC recruits. Being able to have 85 guys on scholarship opposed to 75 strengthens USC while at the same time taking talent away from other powerhouse programs likely recruiting the same kids.

Agree with English too, Kiffin's time is winding down as well.. USC with a legit coach + no probation = title contender again.

I'm liking Cal too. I love their new head coach. I don't know how good they'll be (i'm sure they'll struggle this year) but they're going to be fun to watch, especially offensively. And I wouldn't be surprised to see them trend up in the next 5 years.

Attyla the Hawk wrote:Mora has a lot of Carroll in him. Very vibrant. He exudes energy and charisma. The fact that he's been able to stand toe to toe and win against the likes of Lane Kiffin for the top recruits is understandable. If he can put it together in the next year or two, I can see him having a Carrollesque run in the next decade. SC is going to have to fish or cut bait because Kiffin simply cannot compete with Mora at virtually any level. The real impact of the sanctions are going to be felt in 2013/14 as the lack of depth is going to be most pronounced right now. And if UCLA gets to a point where they have a class that never lost to SC, they could be headed to a dark down period like the 80s/90s. Mora already can lock up just about any recruit that SC wants right now.

Mora is a tool, but at least so far, it seems like he is the right fit for a college coach, which is what everyone said when they were beating the drum for Mora to replace Ty at UW. Personally I don't like the guy because of what he did with the Seahawks and his attitude but I think he's found a home in college football and I respect that. Then again, it wasn't like there wasn't insanely underutilized speed and talent leftover from Slick Rick and all Mora had to do is ditch the pistol, hiring a good coordinator and he's in the pac 12 title game.

Kiffin's time is short, so I'd buy stock in USC. It's going to be another couple years before they fully recover from sanctions and Kiffin has kept them competitive in a Lambrightian way during that time. It seems callous to can him after he put up with the whole mess, but hiring his dad was a complete disaster, he's had trouble keeping them motivated and really being the type of coach that succeeds at SC. Whoever follows him will do pretty damn well.